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Bobby0010
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Hi Bobby0010

Thanks for reaching out on the forum, it feels good to see you coming out and asking for advice.

Looking at your scores, I can say that you need significant improvement in both Verbal and Quant. Majority of students falter in their GMAT exam because they start their preparation with OG.

This is a major mistake because if you start your preparation by solving OG questions, you are skipping to practicing questions without learning the concepts. This is a trial-and-error based preparation methodology which cause a two-fold problem:

    1. It increases your preparation time by up-to 5X.
    2. You tend to miss out on concepts even after solving many questions.

We have helped more than 25,000 people in last 1 year in achieving their target of a good GMAT score. Maximum people attributed their success to the structured process which we suggested them. I suggest you break your preparation into 3 stages and follow the below plan:

    Stage – 1 --> Learn the concepts
    Stage – 2 --> Cement the concepts by practicing a sub-section in Isolation
    Stage – 3 --> Become test ready (practicing all the sub-sections together)

If you follow the above approach you can expect your preparation to get over in a timeline of 2-3 months with 18 hours of preparation time per week.

You can also analyse your ability topic-wise and skip stages if you are good in a topic, this will expedite your preparation even further.

I would be happy to explain this Strategy in detail and create personalized milestones for you on a quick call. Please select a time slot that works here.

Hope the above strategy get you to your target score

Karan
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Hi Bobby0010,

From what you describe in this post, it sounds as though you are just beginning your GMAT studies. In that context, your 480 is a decent initial CAT score (the average score on the Official GMAT hovers around 550 most years). In another post back in April (here: https://gmatclub.com/forum/lbs-lse-impe ... l#p2488953), you noted that you had applied to one (or more) Schools and had gotten rejected. Did you take any Exam (for example, the GMAT or the GRE) before applying - and if so, then how did you score?

Many GMATers spend 3 months (or more) of consistent study time before they hit their 'peak' scores, so if you're going to limit your studies to just 2 months, then there will likely be a limit to how much you can improve in that time.

Before I can offer you the specific advice that you’re looking for, it would help if you could provide a bit more information on your timeline and your goals:

1) What is your overall goal score?
2) What Schools are you planning to apply to and what specific deadlines are you considering?
3) How many hours are you planning to study each week?

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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EMPOWERgmatRichC
Hi Bobby0010,

From what you describe in this post, it sounds as though you are just beginning your GMAT studies. In that context, your 480 is a decent initial CAT score (the average score on the Official GMAT hovers around 550 most years). In another post back in April (here: https://gmatclub.com/forum/lbs-lse-impe ... l#p2488953), you noted that you had applied to one (or more) Schools and had gotten rejected. Did you take any Exam (for example, the GMAT or the GRE) before applying - and if so, then how did you score?

Many GMATers spend 3 months (or more) of consistent study time before they hit their 'peak' scores, so if you're going to limit your studies to just 2 months, then there will likely be a limit to how much you can improve in that time.

Before I can offer you the specific advice that you’re looking for, it would help if you could provide a bit more information on your timeline and your goals:

1) What is your overall goal score?
2) What Schools are you planning to apply to and what specific deadlines are you considering?
3) How many hours are you planning to study each week?

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich

1) I’m aiming for anything above 700
2) LBS,LSE and impérial in the first round which is around early October
I wanna sit for the exam early September incase I don’t get my desired score

3) I just finished undergrad and have most of the day to study for it

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Hi Bobby0010,

If most of your days over the next 2 months are going to be mostly 'open', then it's understandable why you might try to spend most of your free time studying for the GMAT. However, you have to be careful about confusing "quantity" of study with "quality" of study. I've never asked anyone to study 30+ hours a week - and while it's great that you might have the available time to study that much, with that number of study hours, you would run the risk of 'burning out' before Test Day (and that is something that we want to avoid). If you are going to try to study in high volume on any given day, then I suggest that you take one hour "off" for every two hours of study. For example, you could study for 2 hours, then stop for an hour, then study for another 2 hours, then take an hour off, etc. That having been said, raising a 480 to the point that you can consistently score 700+ will likely require at least 3 months of consistent, guided study - and you'll have to make significant improvements to how you handle BOTH the Quant and Verbal sections. Thankfully, the GMAT is a consistent, predictable Exam, so you CAN train to score at a higher level.

Since you are interested in some highly-competitive Schools, you would likely find it beneficial to speak with an Admissions Expert about your overall profile and plans. Those Experts should be able to answer your Admissions questions and help define the specific areas of your profile that could use some improvement.

There's a Forum full of those Experts here:

https://gmatclub.com/forum/ask-admissio ... tants-124/

"Review" is an exceptionally important part of the GMAT training process; your ability to define WHY you're getting questions wrong is essential to defining the areas that you need to work on (and the specific things that you need to 'fix'). As such, I'd like to know a bit more about your performance on this CAT. While a full Mistake Tracker would provide a lot more information, there are some basic questions that you should be able to answer (and the more EXACT you can be with your answers, the better):

After reviewing each section of this recent CAT, how many questions did you get wrong....
1) Because of a silly/little mistake?
2) Because there was some math/verbal that you just could not remember how to do?
3) Because the question was too hard?
4) Because you were low on time and had to guess?
5) How many Verbal questions did you 'narrow down to 2 choices' but still get wrong?

GMAT assassins aren't born, they're made,
Rich
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